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| View Poll Results: What is your verdict on Woolmer as Pakistan coach? | |||
| Doing great | | 5 | 27.78% |
| Good start, but needs a lot more time to deliver | | 12 | 66.67% |
| Needs to start delivering real results soon | | 1 | 5.56% |
| Out! | | 0 | 0% |
| Voters: 18. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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| Woolmer and the Press Even some of those who support the work Woolmer is doing as a coach, and want to give him more time, are unhappy about his policy of glasnost: open and frank communication with the fans and the media on his website and through regular press conferences. Also, some people criticise what they say is his habit of getting into verbal slanging matches, both with ex-players/coaches (eg Miandad, Zaheer), and with various writers in the press (Waheed Khan, Salahudin et al). It seems even the PCB Chairman Shahryan Khan subscribes to this view, at least in part. I personally do not subscribe to this view. IMO, {i} he is not overly sensitive, just wants to set the record straight, {ii} his website is brilliant and very useful for sincere followers of Pakistan cricket, {iii} his interaction with the press is invaluable. Woolmer was asked concerning this on his own website, his answer below: Quote:
__________________ A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes Mark Twain |
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I would say to Pakistan supporter, "be patient", don't get on his back if there is no imediate results, I think he will get you there. Quote:
Last edited by Ernest : 25-12-2004 at 04:11 PM. |
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| I couldn't agree more Ern, patience is the key! By the way, is that a quote in your post ("Another key element of Woolmers presence...") ? If so, where from?
__________________ A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes Mark Twain |
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| I've voted for the option "Good start, but needs a lot more time to dilever". People might argue about how good the start he has given us really is but none of the other options coincided with my verdict of him and this was the cloest to what I think. I know though for a fact that if Javed Miandad was voting what his verdict would have been....in actual fact, under Woolmer we've played so far ONLY 3 tests, won 1, and lost the other two, both very comprehensively. ODIs wise, I think we've got a good win-loss record, including 4 straight victories against India, in 4 very diverse conditions (Colombo, Amstelveen, Birmigham & Kolcatta) but again, there were set backs with us losing the big matches after having done well in the not-so-big-matches. Two absymal, but in no way novel batting collapses saw us being bowled out really cheaply in a couple of important games (vs WI in the ICC CT SF & vs SL in the PakTel Cup TriNation Final). We have so far under him produced an array of contrasting results, with the only consistent thing about them being inconsistency it self. But , as you say too M, there have been some very promising signs as far as individuals are concerned. I take the example first of Shoaib Malik. Before Woolmer he was batting at 6/7/8, hardly getting enough opportunities to tell the world about his true crudentials as a batsman, and a test berth not even in sight. Look at him now. Promoted to 3 in ODIs, he proved be our most consistent player this season, with both bat and bowl. Even in tests, he showed promise with the bat against Sri Lanka at home, and had it not been of the fact that we were playing in Perth we would have most certainly been picked in the test side for the first test too. Now though, Perth is out of the way and he is inline to play in Melbourne. All this aside he's had a good season with Gloucstershire, and aprat from very recent time when questions were raised about his action, he's been a lad high on confidence, feeling good about his cricket, and him self, I don't think there has ever been a time in his career before that I could have said about Shoaib Malik that he is now an integral and very important part of our team, the one-day one at least if not both. In an interview (here) he expressed how much he is a fan of our new coach. It is essentially players like Shoaib Malik who have benefitted most from some one like Woolmer. The ones who have are undoubtedly talented, but have under previous regimes not quite been able to express them selves as much as they are talented. Woolmer now has not yet even had the proper chance of working with with the likes of Shabbir Ahmed and Umar Gul who are unfit and Taufeeq Umar who has not been picked, and even then we have shown enough promise to keep hope that given significant time, we will eventually live up to the dreams and expecatations of the fans. As you say M, the vast majority of Pakistani cricket followers realise Woolmer needs time. And those who don't are essentially proving they are not Pakistan cricket well wishers but they are thinking about themselves...either they are people who are syaing things b/c they are envious of him, and don't agree with his theories, or they are people who basically care about nothing then selling their papers, the rest, all have faith in Woolmer in the long term, and are willing to be patient for that. In a few years we will hopefully have a team that can seriously challenge the best teams in that time. And that can boast of players who'll make other sides just like that. Right now what Woolmer has is similar to what an authour or novelist has at the start of his campaign to write a good book...a lot of ideas. When he finishes working on those ideas, we'll hopefully be something like a best-seller! |
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| Pakistani press is not 'that' bad! On the press issue: upon reflection, the press' treatment of BW is not that bad. Whatever the Pakistani press have been saying about Woolmer, it has not come close to the vitriol, the intrusions, the rumours and innuendo, the lies and the sheer hatred some sections of the English tabloid press reserve for Sven-Goran Eriksson, and which comes out whenever England lose at soccer or Eriksson is caught with his pants down - both relatively regular occurrences it seems. Though I agree that the Pakistani media does get out of hand and loses perspective regularly on cricket, it's no worse than the media in most other countries, and is definitely not as rapacious, aggressive or all-powerful as the likes of Murdoch, Rothermere and Desmond et al are (the honourable proprietors of The Sun, Mail, Mirror and Daily Sport etc).
__________________ A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes Mark Twain Last edited by Maranello : 25-12-2004 at 04:48 PM. |
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| May be its not as bad as the others but pretty bad on its own to be called just bad. Bad enough to be not called "not that bad"... if that makes any sense and if you know what I mean... Woomer has got a treatment. There are endless reminders to how much he earns and that he's English. And reminders of his time with SA, and how they become chokers and how Cronje match fixed under his term as coach. And reminders of all sorts of thing. No way near enough credit given when there should have been. No mention at all (what so ever) of the positive change in attitude he has brought in some of the leading players of the side. No mention at all of how some players have really realised their true potentials and played well in his term. It's bad enough in my opinion, to be called just bad. You are right about our press not being as power full as the other world press b/c only a limited amount of people have access to it so it's less likely to have as much of an influence on forging an opinion amongst the masses as others have in say England, Aus etc. But it doesn't make such press good. Most certainly not in my eyes. I guess you just have to deal with it. I'm less disapointed with the print media, more so with the electronic media. People like Sikander Bhakt (resident analysit for Private News Channel Indus Plus News) never cease to latch on to any opportunity to accuse him of all sorts of things. It tatally daft. Last edited by Zainub : 25-12-2004 at 05:01 PM. |
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| How much he earns is a matter of public interest, since it's eventually public monies - the PCB is sponsored by the government, and its Patron-in-Chief is the President of the Republic! All the points that you raise are valid points for journalistic enquiry, and are all factual events. The press should question why SA were chokers, and why Cronje and the rest could carry on match-fixing right under Woolmer's nose. However, this coverage should be balanced, and not focus on personal attacks. In that, I agree, the press' treatment has been distasteful and jingoistic, but they are doing what needs to be done to sell copy, and as I said, no worse than the press in any other free society. They have not sent the paparazzi chasing after Woolmer every night and day, made caricatures of him, spread racist remarks, created lies and innuendo, etc. All that would be truly shameful.
__________________ A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes Mark Twain Last edited by Maranello : 25-12-2004 at 04:58 PM. |
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I thought I wouls have a rare look on Cricinfo, and read his profile, and to my delight, the innings was mentioned. He was not a great success as a Test Player, but he played to the best of his abilities, I regard Bob Wiilmer, http://www.cricinfo.com/link_to_data...R_RA_01001449/ Read his profile above. I think you will like reading of his success as a coach.
__________________ Ern |
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